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1.
Cross-flow filtration (CFF) has been investigated as a method of separating filamentously growing fungal cells and purifying the polysaccharide produced. The effects of transmembrane pressure, module geometry (e.g. channel height or tube diameter), tangential feed velocity and cell as well as polysaccharide concentration are discussed. Apart from these experiments, influences by the recirculation pump used are shown.List of Symbols b f fouling index - b factor refering to the behaviour of the sublayer - C kg · m–3 concentration - C g kg · m–3 solute concentration at the membrane - C b kg · m–3 solute concentration in the bulk phase - D s-1 shear rate - k m · s–1 mass-transfer coefficient - K mPa · sn consistency index - n flow behaviour index - P w m3 · s–1 · m–2 rate of permeation - P w1 m3 · s–1 · m–2 rate of permeation at 1 minute - P w m3 · s–1 · m–2 rate of permeation at the beginning - p Pa pressure - Q m2 largest cross-section of a particle - q m2 smallest cross-section of a particle - Re Reynolds number - R f –1 fouling resistance - R m m–1 membrane resistance - t s time - w m · s–1 tangential feed velocity Greek Symbols friction factor - pTM Pa transmembrane pressure - mPa · s shear viscosity - sp specific viscosity (rel. increase of viscosity sp=rel-1) - [] m3· kg–1 intrinsic viscosity - w m2 · s–1 kinematic viscosity - kg · m–3 density Indices b bulk - cell cells - f fouling - g gelling - PS polysaccharide - rel relative - sp specific - w water  相似文献   

2.
Summary Intracarotid infusion of isoprenaline, either alone or in combination with acetylcholine infusion was used to stimulate salivation by the mandibular glands of anaesthetized red kangaroos. Isoprenaline alone (0.20–1.25 mol·kg–1·min–1) elicited flow rates ranging from 0.014 to 0.239 ml·min–1 (1.21–28.1 l·g gland–1·min–1). Salivary concentrations of sodium, chloride, phosphate and urea were negatively correlated with flow, whereas potassium, calcium, magnesium, hydrogen ion, bicarbonate, protein, and osmolality were poorly correlated with flow. Relative to cholinergic saliva produced at equivalent flow rates, isoprenaline-evoked saliva had higher osmolality, saliva/plasma urea ratios and concentrations of protein, potassium, magnesium, bicarbonate, and phosphate, but lower sodium, chloride and hydrogen ion levels. At a steady salivary flow (0.5 ml·min–1), superimposition of isoprenaline infusion (0.15 mol·kg–1·min–1) on a pre-existing acetylcholine infusion reduced the rate of acetylcholine administration necessary to maintain flow, increased osmolality and the concentrations of protein, urea, potassium, calcium, magnesium, bicarbonate and phosphate and decreased sodium, chloride and hydrogen ion in the saliva. Salivary amylase activity was low and highly variable and the amylase activity/protein ratio fell substantially during isoprenaline stimulation. These results support the conclusion that the enzyme is of extrinsic origin. The response of the kangaroo mandibular gland to isoprenaline stimulation was very similar to that reported for rat mandibular gland, suggesting that the same ion transport phenomena underlie mandibular secretion in both species and probably in therian mammals generally.  相似文献   

3.
Molecular diffusion of solutes, like sucrose in the xanthan gum fermentation, is important in order to understand the complex behavior of mass transfer mechanisms during the process. This work was focused to determine the diffusion coefficient of sucrose, a carbon source for xanthan production, using similar sucrose and xanthan concentrations to those occurring in a typical fermentation. The diaphragm cell method was used in experimental determinations. The data showed that diffusion coefficient of sucrose significantly decreases when xanthan gum concentration increases. Theoretical and semiempirical models were used to predict sucrose diffusivity in xanthan solutions. Molecular properties and rheological behavior of the system were considered in the modeling. The models tested fitted well the behavior of experimental data and that reported for oxygen in the same system.List of Symbols A constant in eq. (5) - C pg cm–3 polymer concentration - D cm2 s–1 diffusivity - D ABcm2 s–1 diffusivity of A through liquid solvent - D APcm2 s–1 diffusivity of A in polymer solution - D AWcm2 s–1 diffusivity of A in water - D Pcm2 s–1 diffusivity of polymer in liquid solvent - E D gradient of the activation energy for diffusion - H P hydratation factor of the polymer in water (g of bound water/g of polymer) - K dyn sn cm–2 consistency index - K 1 constant in eq. (5) - K P overall binding coefficient [g of bound solute/cm3 of solution]/[g of free solute/cm3 of polymer free solution] - n flow behavior index - M Bg g mol–1 molucular weight of liquid solvent - M Pg g mol–1 molecular weight of the polymer - M Sg g mol–1 Molecular weight of polymer solution (= M BXB+MPXP) - R cm3 atm g mol–1 K–1 ideal gas law constant - T K absolute temperature - V Bcm3 g mol–1 molar volume of liquid solvent - V Pcm3 g mol–1 molar volume of polymer - V Scm3 g mol–1 molar volume of polymer solution - X B solvent molar fraction - X P polymer molar fraction - polymer blockage shape factor - P volume fraction of polymer in polymer solution - g cm–1 s–1 viscosity - ag cm–1 s–1 apparent viscosity of the polymer solution - icm3 g–1 intrinsic viscosity - 0 g cm–1 s–1 solvent viscosity - Pg cm–1 s–1 polymer solution viscosity - R relative viscosity (= / 0) - =0 g cm–1 s–1 viscosity of polymer solution obtained at zero shear rate - 0 g cm–3 water density  相似文献   

4.
Methods of intrinsic viscosity () and beam flow birefringence were used to study the effects of some single-charged ions (F, Cl, Br, I, NO 2, NO 3, ClO 4, SCN, CH3COO) on the size and thermodynamic rigidity of a DNA molecule in aqueous solutions of sodium salts in a broad interval of ionic strength when temperature T is changed. It has been shown that the close interactions in a macromolecule and the resulting DNA persistent length a are independent of the type of the salt anion over the whole interval of . On the contrary, the specific volume of the DNA molecule in solution, proportional to the value, is quite sensitive to the anionic composition of the solvent, which is due to the effect of anions and their hydration on the long-range interactions in the macromolecule. The presence of polyatomic and halide anions is manifested differently in the value of DNA. Possible factors responsible for the observed effect and the role of structural alterations of water upon anion hydration are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
The stability and, consequently, the lifetime of immobilized enzymes (IME) are important factors in practical applications of IME, especially so far as design and operation of the enzyme reactors are concerned. In this paper a model is presented which describes the effect of intraparticle diffusion on time stability behaviour of IME, and which has been verified experimentally by the two-substrate enzymic reaction. As a model reaction the ethanol oxidation catalysed by immobilized yeast alcohol dehydrogenase was chosen. The reaction was performed in the batch-recycle reactor at 303 K and pH-value 8.9, under the conditions of high ethanol concentration and low coenzyme (NAD+) concentration, so that NAD+ was the limiting substrate. The values of the apparent and intrinsic deactivation constant as well as the apparent relative lifetime of the enzyme were calculated.The results show that the diffusional resistance influences the time stability of the IME catalyst and that IME appears to be more stabilized under the larger diffusion resistance.List of Symbols C A, CB, CE mol · m–3 concentration of coenzyme NAD+, ethanol and enzyme, respectively - C p mol · m3 concentration of reaction product NADH - d p mm particle diameter - D eff m2 · s–1 effective volume diffusivity of NAD+ within porous matrix - k d s–1 intrinsic deactivation constant - K A, KA, KB mol · m–3 kinetic constant defined by Eq. (1) - K A x mol · m–3 kinetic constant defined by Eq. (5) - r A mol · m–3 · s–1 intrinsic reaction rate - R m particle radius - R v mol · m–3 · s–1 observed reaction rate per unit volume of immobilized enzyme - t E s enzyme deactivation time - t r s reaction time - V mol · m–3 · s–1 maximum reaction rate in Eq. (1) - V x mol · m–3 · s–1 parameter defined by Eq. (4) - V f m3 total volume of fluid in reactor - w s kg mass of immobilized enzyme bed - factor defined by Eqs. (19) and (20) - kg · m–3 density of immobilized enzyme bed - unstableness factor - effectiveness factor - Thiele modulus - relative half-lifetime of immobilized enzyme Index o values obtained with fresh immobilized enzyme  相似文献   

6.
Tryptamine levels have been determined in mouse brain regions and spinal cord and in rat spinal cord. They were; caudate nucleus 2.5 ng·g–1, hypothalamus <0.5 ng·g–1, hippocampus <0.7 ng·g–1, olfactory bulb <0.7 ng·g–1, olfactory tubercles <0.6 ng·g–1, brain stem <0.4 ng·g–1, cerebellum <1.0 ng·g–1, and the rest 0.9 ng·g–1. The mouse whole brain was found to have 0.5 ng·g–1, the mouse spinal cord 0.3 ng·g–1, and the rat spinal cord 0.3 ng·g–1. These concentrations increased rapidly to 22.8 ng·g–1, 14.2 ng·g–1, and 6.6 ng·g–1 respectively at 1 hr after 200 mg·kg–1 pargyline. The turnover rates and half lives of tryptamine in the mouse brain and spinal cord and rat spinal cord were estimated to be 0.14 nmol·g–1·h–1 and 0.9 min; 0.054 nmol·g–1·h–1 and 1.5 min and 0.04 nmol·g–1·h–1 and 1.6 min respectively. The aromaticl-aminoacid decarboxylase inhibitors NSD 1034 and NSD 1055 reduced synthesis of tryptamine in controls and pargyline pretreated animals. Tryptophan increased the concentrations of mouse striatal tryptamine and 5-hydroxytryptamine and brain stem 5-hydroxyindole acetic acid.p-Chlorophenylalanine reduced formation of 5-hydroxytryptamine and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid but did not change that of tryptamine.  相似文献   

7.
8.
High molecular weight lectins (> 100 kDa) from seeds of the legumes Canavalia brasiliensis (CnBr), Cratylia floribunda (CFL), Phaseolus vulgaris (PHA) and Vatairea macrocarpa (VML), temporarily stimulate the respiration of Rhizobium tropici-CIAT899 and R. etli-CFN42. These stimulants were significant (P < 0.05) in bacterial suspensions (> 2.85 mg dry biomass ml–1), having at least 6200 molecules of lectins per bacteria. The VML (20 g ml–1), induced specific O2 demand of 2.3–2.5 M O2 min–1 mg dry biomass–1, in CFN42 and CIAT899, respectively. However, CnBr, CFL and PHA induced smaller demands of O2 (5×), in both strains. The order of affinities of the lectins was approximately VML > PHA > CFL > CnBr, with regard to respiratory stimuli in CIAT899 strain. The co-administration of 10 g VML ml–1 and 9.8 M galactose, in CIAT899 suspensions, reduced the respiratory stimuli significantly in relation to the treatment with VML alone. These respiratory stimuli, induced by the lectins, increase the significance of the interaction lectin × Rhizobium in terms of bacterial physiology. Its understanding could be important in relation to bacterial symbiotic behaviour.  相似文献   

9.
The undulatory excitations (flickering) of human and camel erythrocytes were evaluated by employing the previously used flicker spectroscopy and by local measurements of the autocorrelation function K (t) of the cell thickness fluctuations using a dynamic image processing technique. By fitting theoretical and experimental flicker spectra relative values of the bending elastic modulus K c of the membrane and of the cytoplasmic viscosity were obtained. The effects of shape changes were monitored by simultaneous measurement of the average light intensity I 0 passing the cells and by phase contrast microscopic observation of the cells. Evaluation of the cellular excitations in terms of the quasi-spherical model yielded values of K c /R inf0 sup3 and · R 0 (R 0=equivalent sphere radius) and allowed us to account (1) for volume changes, (2) for effects of surface tension and spontaneous curvature and (3) for the non-exponential decay of K (t). From the long time decay of K (t) we obtained an upper limit of the bending elastic modulus of normal cells of K c = 2–3 · 10–19 Nm which is an order of magnitude larger than the value found by reflection interference contrast microscopy (RICT, K c , = 3.4 · 10–20 Nm, Zilker et al. 1987) but considerably lower than expected for a bilayer containing 50% cholesterol (K c = 5 · 10–19 Nm, Duwe et al. 1989). The major part of the paper deals with long time measurements (order of hours) of variations of the apparent K c and values of single cells (and their reversibility) caused (1) by osmotic volume changes, (2) by discocytestomatocyte transitions induced by albumin and triflouperazine, (3) by discocyte-echinocyte transitions induced by expansion of the lipid/protein bilayer (by incubation with lipid vesicles) and by ATP-depletion in physiological NaCI solution, (4), by coupling or decoupling of bilayer and cytoskeleton using wheat germ agglutinin or erythrocytes with elliptocytosis and (5) by cross-linking the cytoskeleton using diamide. These experiments showed: (1) K c and are minimal at physiological osmolarity and temperature and well controlled over a large range of these parameters. (2) Echinocyte formation does not markedly alter the apparent membrane bending stiffness. (3) During swelling the cell may undergo a transient discocyte-stomatocyte transition. (4) Strong increases of the apparent K c and after cup-formation or strong swelling and deflation are due to the effect of shear elasticity and surface tension. Our major conclusions are: (1) The erythrocyte membrane exhibits a shear free deformation regime which requires ATP for its maintenance. (2) Shape transitions may be caused by relative area changes either of the two monolayers of the lipid/protein bilayer (corresponding to the bilayer coupling hypothesis) or of the bilayer and the cytoskeleton where the latter mechanism appears to be more frequent. (3) The low bending stiffness and the shear free deformation regime are explained in terms of a slight excess area of the lipid bilayer leading to a pre-undulated surface profile. Freeze fracture electron microscopy studies provide direct evidence for a pre-undulated bilayer with an undulation wavelength of approximately 100 nm. Offprint requests to: E. Sackmann  相似文献   

10.
Summary Pulmonary CO-diffusing capacity (D l CO), lung volume, pulmonary perfusion and O2-uptake were measured by non-invasive techniques in the lizardsVaranus exanthematicus andTupinambis teguixin (mean body weight 2.2 kg for both species).The CO-diffusing capacity was at 25–27°C 0.059 mlstpd·kg–1·min–1·Torr–1 inVaranus, which is 47% greater than the value of 0.040 mlstpd·kg–1·min–1·Torr–1 inTupinambis. The lung volume ofVaranus was 36 ml·kg–1 and that ofTupinambis 20 ml·kg–1. At 35–37°C the diffusing capacity of lizard lungs are about 25% of those for mammals of comparable size.InVaranus pulmonary CO-diffusing capacity increased with temperature from 0.027 mlstpd·kg–1·min–1·Torr–1 at 17–19 °C to 0.075 mlstpd·kg–1·min–1·Torr–1 at 35–37 °C. This change closely matched a concomitant increase of O2-uptake. Pulmonary perfusion increased from 27 ml·kg–1·min–1 to 55 ml·kg–1·min–1 within this temperature range.The study emphasizes that pulmonary diffusing capacity cannot be fully evaluated without information on pulmonary perfusion and O2-uptake. In reptiles and other ectotherms diffusing capacity must be reported at specified body temperature.  相似文献   

11.
The light-dependent rate of photosystem-II (PSII) damage and repair was measured in photoautotrophic cultures of Dunaliella salina Teod. grown at different irradiances in the range 50–3000 mol photons · m–2· s–1. Rates of cell growth increased in the range of 50–800 mol photons·m–2·s–1, remained constant at a maximum in the range of 800–1,500 mol photons·m–2 ·s–1, and declined due to photoinhibition in the range of 1500–3000 mol photons·m–2·s–1. Western blot analyses, upon addition of lincomycin to the cultures, revealed first-order kinetics for the loss of the PSII reaction-center protein (D1) from the 32-kDa position, occurring as a result of photodamage. The rate constant of this 32-kDa protein loss was a linear function of cell growth irradiance. In the presence of lincomycin, loss of the other PSII reaction-center protein (D2) from the 34-kDa position was also observed, occurring with kinetics similar to those of the 32-kDa form of D1. Increasing rates of photodamage as a function of irradiance were accompanied by an increase in the steady-state level of a higher-molecular-weight protein complex ( 160-kDa) that cross-reacted with D1 antibodies. The steady-state level of the 160-kDa complex in thylakoids was also a linear function of cell growth irradiance. These observations suggest that photodamage to D1 converts stoichiometric amounts of D1 and D2 (i.e., the D1/D2 heterodimer) into a 160-kDa complex. This complex may help to stabilize the reaction-center proteins until degradation and replacement of D1 can occur. The results indicated an intrinsic half-time of about 60 min for the repair of individual PSII units, supporting the idea that degradation of D1 after photodamage is the rate-limiting step in the PSII repair process.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - PSI photosystem I - PSII photosystem II - D1 the 32-kDa reaction-center protein of PSII, encoded by the chloroplast psbA gene - D2 the 34-kDa reactioncenter protein of PSII, encoded by the chloroplast psbD gene - QA primary electron-accepting plastoquinone of PSII The work was supported by grant 94-37100-7529 from the US Department of Agriculture, National Research Initiative Competitive Grants Program.  相似文献   

12.
The problem of optimising agitation and aeration in a given fermenter is addressed. The objective function is total electric power consumed for agitation, compression and refrigeration. The major constraint considered is to ensure that the dissolved oxygen concentration is above the critical value. It is shown that it is possible to analytically calculate the optimal pair (air flowrate, stirrer speed) and that, at least for the industrial antibiotics fermentation used as case-study, the optimum lies within a window for satisfactory operation, limited by other possible constraints to the problem. Savings achievable by optimal operation as compared with current industrial procedure were found to be around 10% at pilot plant scale (0.26 m3) and 20% at full scale (85 m3).List of Symbols A fermenter cross sectional area (m2) - C dissolved oxygen concentration (mole m–3) - C * DO concentration in equilibrium with the gas (mole m–3) - C crit critical DO concentration (mole m–3) - C p specific heat of air at constant pressure (J kg–1 K–1) - C sp dissolved oxygen set point (mole m–3) - C v specific heat of air at constant volume (J kg–1 K–1) - D agitator diameter (m) - f pressure correction of air flow-rate - (Fl g)F aeration number at flooding - (Fr g)F froude number at flooding - k coefficient in expression for mass transfer coefficient - K La volumetric oxygen transfer coefficient (s–1) - m power exponent in expression for mass transfer coefficient - n gas flow rate exponent in expression for mass transfer coefficient - n * number of impellers - N rotation speed (s–1) - N F rotation speed at flooding (s–1) - N p unaerated power number - N pg aerated power number - OUR Oxygen Uptake Rate (mole m–3 s–1) - p 0 atmospheric pressure (N m–2) - p 1 compressor exit pressure (N m–2) - p 2 pressure at the bottom of the fermenter (N m–2) - p 3 pressure at the top of the fermenter (N m–2) - P c compression power (W) - P d power added by expansion (W) - P ev power removed by evaporation (W) - P g agitation power (W) - P m power added by metabolism (W) - P r power removed by refrigeration (W) - P t total power (W) - Q air flow-rate at atmospheric conditions (m3 s–1) - Q f air flow-rate at average fermenter conditions (m3 s–1) - s 0 absolute humidity at atmospheric conditions - s 3 absolute humidity at fermenter exit - T tank diameter (m) - V liquid volume (m3) - v s gas superficial velocity (m s–1) - i parameter defined in the text - safety margin for dissolved oxygen (mole m–3) - ratio of specific heats of air - g agitation efficiency - c compression efficiency - r refrigeration efficiency - liquid density (kg m–3) - g air density (kg m–3) - latent heat of vaporisation of water (J kg–1) The authors are grateful to Elsa Silva, Carlos Lopes, Carlos Aguiar, Fernando Mendes, and Alexandre Cardoso, who helped with parts of this work, and to CIPAN for permission to publish these data.  相似文献   

13.
Summary We have used magnetic resonance spectroscopy, both ESR and13C spin relaxation, to measure translational and rotational mobilities and partition coefficients of small nitroxide solutes in dipalmitoyl lecithin liposomes. Above the bilayer transition temperature,T c, the bilayer interior is quite fluid, as determined from the solutes' rapid rotational and moderately rapid translational motion; the rotational and translational viscosities within the bilayer are R <1cP and =6–10cP, respectively. and R are independent of molecular size for all solutes studied, but all were small compared to the size of the phospholipids. , and probably R , are relatively independent of temperature aboveT c, but both increase very sharply as temperature is lowered belowT c; at 32°C, R increases to 6cP and is greater than 1000 cP. Anisotropy of rotational motion increases gradually as temperature is lowered toT c, and changes little belowT c; anisotropy of translational motion was not investigated.13C nuclear spin relaxation measurements indicate that translational motion of nitroxide solutes is more rapid in the center of the bilayer than near the polar interface. It takes at least 100 nsec for a solute molecule to cross the bilayer/water interface. We estimate a lower limit of 2 sec/cm for the interfacial resistance to solute diffusion; this result indicates that interfacial resistance dominates permeation across the membrane. The relative solubility, or partition coefficient, is a strong function of solute structure, and decreases abruptly on cooling through the transition temperature. From the partition coefficient and its temperature dependence we calculate the free energy, enthalpy, and entropy of partition. Effects of cholesterol on partition and diffusion coefficients are compatible with the interpretation that bilayers containing cholesterol consist of two phases.  相似文献   

14.
The residual motion of spin labels bound to cysteine 93 and to lysines of methemoglobin has been studied by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. To separate the influences of the solvent and the protein environment of the label fluctuations, the correlation times, , were analyzed as a function of temperature for fixed solvent viscosities, . Results show that over a wide range of viscosity the dependence of on may be empirically described by a power law k . The exponent k depends strongly on the location of the label on the protein surface. If one regards the spin labels as artificial amino acid side chains, characteristic values of correlation times and amplitudes of the rotational motion at the surface can be given. For =1 cP and T=297 K the correlation time of the labels bound to lysines is found to be =9 · 10–10 s and the rotational diffusion is nearly isotropic. The spin label bound to cysteine 93 occupies a protein pocket, its rotational motion is therefore restricted. The correlation time of the label motion within a limited motion cone of semi angle =30° ± 3° is found to be =1.3 · 10–9 s for =1 cP and T=297 K.  相似文献   

15.
Summary The kidneys of winter flounders transferred to hypotonic medium were investigated for glomerular and tubular handling of fluid and electrolytes and for the urinary excretion of proteins. Media were sea water (925 mosm·kg–1) and brackish water (70 mosm·kg–1).In sea water, the urine was hypertonic to the plasma in 7 fish of this study. Urine flow rate was correlated with the GFR. After adaptation to brackish water a delay of 1 to 3 days was observed until the kidneys switched from fluid retention to the excretion of large amounts of dilute urine. GFR and urine flow rate were increased from 0.61±0.08 to 1.58±0.29 ml·h–1·kg–1 and from 0.14±0.02 to 0.68±0.08 ml·h–1·kg–1, respectively . With increased filtered load the tubular reabsorption of fluid decreased from 74±2.4% to 45±11.2%. The excretion rates of sodium and potassium were increased due to decreased fractional sodium and potassium reabsorption. The urinary excretion of divalent cations, however, was reduced because the net tubular reabsorption of calcium was increased and the net secretion of magnesium was diminished.Both the urinary total protein concentration and the protein pattern showed no significant change, but the rate of protein excretion was increased from 0.21±0.04 to 0.60±0.05 mg·h–1·kg–1. The comparison of protein patterns obtained from urine and serum samples revealed that high molecular weight (HMW) proteins prevail in the serum whereas low molecular weight (LMW) proteins dominate in the urine. The diminished quantity of the HMW-protein fraction in the urine thus may reflect size selectivity of the glomerular filtration barrier for serum proteins also in the winter flounder.Abbreviations BW brackish water - SW sea water - GFR glomerular filtration rate - HMW heigh molecular weight - LMW low molecular weight  相似文献   

16.
Nitrate induction in spruce: an approach using compartmental analysis   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Using 13NO 3 -efflux analysis, the induction of nitrate uptake by externally supplied nitrate was monitored in roots of intact Picea glauca (Moench) Voss. seedlings over a 5-d period. In agreement with our earlier studies, efflux analysis revealed three compartments, which have been identified as surface adsorption, apparent free space, and cytoplasm. While induction of nitrate uptake was pronounced, NO 3 fluxes in induced plants were decidedly lower and the induction response was slower than in other species. Influx rose from 0.1 mol·g–1·h–1 (measured at 100 M [NO 3 o) in uninduced plants to a maximum of 0.5 mol·g–1h–1 after 3 d of exposure to 100 M [NO 3 o and declined to 0.3–0.4 mol·g–1h–1 at the end of the 5-d period. Efflux remained relatively constant around 0.02-0.04 mol·g–1h–1, but its percentage with respect to influx declined from initially high values (around 30%) to steady-state values of 4–7%. Cytoplasmic [NO 3 ] ranged from the low micromolar in uninduced plants to a maximum of 2 mM in plants fully induced at 100 M [NO 3 ]o. In-vivo root nitrate reductase activity (NRA) was measured over the same time period, and was found to follow a similar pattern of induction as influx. The maximum response in NRA slightly preceded that of influx. It increased from 25 nmol·g–1·h–1 without prior exposure to NO 3 to peak values around 150 nmol· g–1h–1 after 2 d of exposure to 100 M [NO 3 ]o. Subsequently, NRA declined by about 50%. The dynamics of flux partitioning to reduction, to the vacuole, the xylem, and to efflux during the induction process are discussed.The research was supported by an Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council, Canada, grant to Dr. A.D.M. Glass and by a University of British Columbia Graduate Fellowship to Herbert J. Kronzucker. Our thanks go to Dr. M. Adam and Mr. P. Culbert at the particle accelerator facility TRIUMF on the University of British Columbia campus for providing 13N, to Drs. R.D. Guy and S. Silim for providing plant material, and to Dr. M.Y. Wang, Mr. J. Bailey, Mr. J. Mehroke and Mr. J. Vidmar for essential assistance in experiments.  相似文献   

17.
Two strains of cultured tobacco cells (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv. Wisconsin 38) differing in their requirement for exogenous cytokinins (cytokinin-dependent and cytokinin-autonomous) were immobilized on polyphenylenoxide (Sorfix) activated with glutaraldehyde. Columns packed with immobilized cells were continually eluted with diluted Murashige and Skoog's medium lacking or supplemented with synthetic cytokinin (6-benzylaminopurine; BA). Purified samples of column eluates were fractionated by HPLC, andtrans-zeatin (t-Z) andtrans-zeatin riboside (t-ZR) content was estimated by enzyme immunoassay. Both cytokinin-autonomous and cytokinin-dependent tobacco cells produced and excretedt-Z and its riboside, and there were significant quantitative differences between the strains. The steady-state excretion rate oft-Z was 19.8 ng · g–1 dw · h–1 and 4 ng · g–1 dw · h–1, respectively, and that oft-ZR 4 ng · g–1 dw · h–1 and 1 ng · g–1 dw · h–1, respectively. Exposure of cytokinin-dependent cells to BA after 72 h of starving for this synthetic cytokinin caused temporary increase in excretion of both zeatin and its riboside. After the application of 5 M BA for 24 h, the excretion rate oft-ZR reached 5 ng · g–1 dw · h–1 (5-fold increase), and that oft-Z achieved 12 ng · g–1 dw · h–1 (3-fold increase). The elevation oft-Z excretion was delayed about 13 h compared witht-ZR excretion, which started increasing almost immediately after BA application. A pulse of BA in lower concentration (1.5 M for 30 h) provoked lower response.  相似文献   

18.
Mechanical extensibility of the cell wall limits the elongation growth of roots. Low pH, ranging from pH 3–4.5, induces rapid elongation of excised roots, a phenomenon known as acid growth. The creep-extension analysis was carried out to measure and elucidate the viscoelastic properties of root cell walls in the acidic environment in vitro. The viscoelastic properties were determined at the elongation zone of the lateral roots of pea (Pisum sativumL. cv. Alaska) and described by the physical parameters of three elastic (E0, E1, E2) and three viscosity (0, 1, 2) parameters using a Kelvin–Voigt–Burgers' model. The present method could measure the viscoelasticity of 1-mm long root zones from 2 to 9 mm behind the tip. Among the parameters, E0 and 0 were the most significant parameters to represent the whole extensibility of the roots. The parameter 0 markedly declined in response to the environmental low pH (acid growth), whereas other parameters were not much affected by low pH. Relationship between the change in these physical parameters and the change in cell wall extensibility under low pH was discussed in order to elucidate the rheological processes taking place in the elongating cell walls.  相似文献   

19.
Based on the kinetic constants determined and the mathematical model of the reactor system developed, the performance of axial flow packed bed continuous enzyme reactor system was studied experimentally and also simulated with the aid of a computer for ultimate objective of optimization of the glucose isomerase reactor system.A reactor model was established analogous to heterogeneous catalytic reactor model taking into account the effect of fluid mass transfer and reversible kinetics. The investigated catalyst system consists of immobilized Streptomyces bambergiensis cells containing the enzyme glucose isomerase, which catalyzes the isomerization of glucose to fructose.List of Symbols A 0, A 1, A 2 parameters in axial dispersion reactor model - c go, cg, cgemol m–3 glucose concentration at time t=0, at any time and at equilibrium conditions - c gsmol m–3 glucose concentration at particle surface - C dimensionless glucose concentration - d pm particle diameter - d rm diameter of reactor tube - Da Damkohler number - D eff m2 s–1 effective glucose diffusion coefficient in Ca-alginate gel beads - k fm s–1 film transfer coefficient - K e equilibrium constant - K mg, Kmfmol m–3 Michaelis-Menten constant for glucose and fructose, respectively - K mmol m–3 modified Michaelis-Menten constant - K dimensionless parameter - K * dimensionless parameter - L m length of reactor tube - Pe Peclet number - Pe p particle Peclet number - Q m3 s–1 volumetric flow rate - (-r g) mol m–3 s–1 reaction rate - Re p Reynolds particle number - Sc Schmidt number - Sh Sherwood number - t s time - v 0 m s–1 linear superficial fluid velocity - V mg, Vmfmol g–1 s–1 maximal reaction rate for glucose and fructose, respectively - V mmol m–3 s–1 modified maximal reaction rate for glucose - V mg x mol m–2 s–1 maximal reaction rate for glucose - X g, Xge glucose conversion and glucose conversion at equilibrium conditions - X normalized conversion - Y dimensionless glucose concentration - void fraction of fixed bed - effectiveness factor of biocatalyst - Pa s kinematic viscosity of substrate - 1 s first absolute weighted moment - 2 s2 second central weighted moment - gkg m–3 substrate density - pkg m–3 particle density - 2 dimensionless variance of RTD curve - s residence time  相似文献   

20.
A membrane enzyme reactor with simultaneous separation was investigated. Enzymes, urease and aspartase, were immobilized by a porous polytetrafluoroethylene membrane. Electrical field was applied in the medium while the reaction was carried out. Products with electrical charge could be separated through the membrane from the reaction medium as they were formed. Reaction behavior was analyzed by a simple model considering both pore-migration and reaction in the skelton of the membrane. According to the analysis the inherent reaction rate of the immobilized enzymes decreases significantly. This is probably caused by the structural variation of enzymes. For the case of urease, the change of pH inside the membrane may also cause the decrease of the reaction rate. The model analysis showed that the enzyme content in the membrane and the residence time of the substrate in the membrane governed overall extent of reaction.List of Symbols e g (dm3)–1 enzyme concentration in the membrane - L cm membrane thickness - K m mM Michaelis constant - Rate mmol · min–1 · g–1 rate of product formation per unit weight of enzyme - S mM substrate concentration - S in mM inlet substrate concentration - S out mM outlet substrate concentration - u cm · min–1 migration rate - V V voltage between the electrodes - V m mmol · min–1 · g–1 maximum reaction rate - X conversion - z cm distance from the surface inside the membrane - void fraction of the porous membrane - tortuosity of the membrane - min space time  相似文献   

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